I remember an
old B-24 navigator I used to fly Stearmans with in Sacramento 26 years
ago, once telling me about combat in the European theater: "There we
were, plodding along at 20,000 feet, right in the middle of the flak,
getting the crap shot out of us, and there were those damned B-17s at
26,000 feet, flying along above it."

The
Consolidated B-24 Liberator was built in larger numbers than any other
heavy bomber used by any combatant of the Second World War, with 18,188
Liberators built between June 1941 and May 31, 1945, when the last
production line was shut down. It served with more air forces than the
B-17, it had a greater range, and a greater load-carrying capability.
Yet the B-17 is considered one of the truly "immortal" aircraft of the
Second World War, while the B-24 served its entire career in the shadow
of the B-17, as my old friend remembered. Within months of the end of the
war, the Liberator left the active Air Force as quickly as units could be
deactivated and the airplanes flown to the boneyards.

Compared to
the aesthetically superb B-17, the Liberator was an ugly duckling, with
its slab-sided fuselage and barn-door vertical stabilizers. While
compared with the Fortress historically, the Liberator actually came from
a later generation of design and technology, and came to life
specifically as the result of an Air Force specification for a bomber
with superior performance to the B-17, with a speed of 300 m.p.h., range
of 3,000 miles, and ceiling of 35,000 feet. With a wartime load of armor
and defensive armament, the combat-ready B-24 did not meet these
requirements, but it was so much better than the B-17 on every
specification other than ability to absorb punishment far beyond design
specifications - one never sees photographs of B-24s that returned to
base with their nose blown off, or the rear fuselage nearly severed by a
mid-air-collision with a Bf-109 - that it ended up serving with the U.S.
Navy, the RAF, the RAAF, RCAF and the SAAF, in every theater in which
Allied air forces were committed. The B-24 was largely responsible for
winning the Battle of the Atlantic (along with the introduction of the
escort carrier), as the first anti-submarine aircraft with a range
capable of plugging the "Atlantic Gap" where the U-boats scored their
greatest victories. It replaced the B-17 completely in the Pacific, due
to its longer range and greater load-carrying capability. The B-17 could
never have carried out "Operation Tidal Wave," the great Ploesti raid
flown from North Africa on August 1, 1943,

The
Consolidated Model 32 was designed around the Davis high-life airfoil,
which offered 25 percent less profile drag at low speed and 10 percent
less at high speed, than conventional airfoils. While the Liberator's
wing would be dirtied-up with various excrescences associated with a very
non-aerodynamic landing gear installation, the value of the Davis wing
can be seen from the fact that once the Liberator flew, Boeing designed
the B-29 around the same wing.

The first
combat-worthy Liberator was the B-24D, 2,425 of which were built by
Consolidated in San Diego, and 303 by Consolidated Fort Worth, with an
additional 10 by Douglas at Tulsa. With the outbreak of war in December,
1941, Ford Motor Company was brought into Liberator production, using the
world's largest factory at Willow Run, where production ultimately hit
stride at 200 aircraft per month with the B-24J.

By 1943, the
Liberator was in production at Consolidated Aircraft in San Diego and
Fort Worth, Douglas at Tulsa and Dallas, and Ford at Willow Run,
Michigan. Combat experience had shown the airplane needed additional
forward armament. In the Pacific, technicians of the 5th Air Force
operating under the leadership of "Pappy" Gunn had come up with a new
nose that utilized the same tail turret in a different nose. In late
1943, this field modification showed up on the production line as the
B-24H, utilizing an Emerson turret. 738 Hs were built by Consolidated
Fort Worth, with an additional 1,780 built by Ford and 582 by Douglas.
Production hit its stride with the 6,678 B-24Js built by the five
contractors starting in January 1944.

By September
1944, the USAAF had an operational strength of 6,043 B-24s, equipping 45
Bomb Groups world-wide. Liberators provided all the heavy-bombing
capability in the Pacific prior to the introduction of the B-29, and were
the majority bomber of the 15th Air Force that operated from Italy.
Only in the 8th Air Force was the Liberator in the minority. Four
B-24 groups of the Second Air Division of the Eighth were re-equipped
with B-17s in June and July 1944, so that the 1st and 2nd Air Divisions
were totally B-17-equipped, with the 3rd Air Division flying B-24s.
In part, this recognized the nature of
the air war over
Northern Europe, which was the "main front" of the combined bomber
offensive and faced the greatest opposition from the Luftwaffe. The
high-altitude capability of the Fortress, and its ability to survive
heavy damage, outweighed its comparatively light bomb load of only 4,000
lbs. The all-up weight of 71,400 lbs of the B-24J had only served
to worsen its flying characteristics, while the B-17 was considered a
more stable bombing platform.

In retrospect,
apart from a production record no other airplane will ever come close to,
the B-24 insured its place in history by flying missions no other bomber
could accomplish, be it the longest-range bombing mission flown before
the advent of the B-29 (the August 1943 Ploesti raid), closing the
Atlantic Gap, or flying fuel to China for the B-29s. The Liberator
delivered bombs, depth charges, gasoline, freight, troops and V.I.P.s,
establishing a record that - when examined in detail - is truly second to
none, proving decisively that "ugly is as ugly does."

THE KIT

As I recall,
the B-24J Liberator - the first Liberator model released by Monogram -
came out no later than 1977, inasmuch as I built a model from it for a
boss who had flown them in that year. In the late 1970s or early 1980s,
the kit was re-released as the earlier "glass nose" B-24D, and releases
in the years since have alternated between the two releases, both of
which are currently out of production.

Modelers who
have never been around real airplanes close enough to actually touch them
claim that the kit is "out of date," since it doesn't have the now de
rigueur "engraved panel lines." Never mind that engraved panel lines as
a rule are actually more inaccurate than the old raised panel lines,
never further mind the fact that the Liberator was constructed with
lapped panels, so that the raised panel line detail indeed looks more
"right." What's needed is a new "state of the art" Tamiya kit at a
retail price of $150, to satisfy those without the hand-eye coordination
to apply putty to a seam line.

In fact, with
an ever-so-slight application of "some modeling ability required" the
Monogram B-24 can be built out of the box with nothing more than some Mr.
Surfacer 500 along some seams, without harming the panel lines. And no
other model company is going to release a kit of this airplane at a price
less than $20, which is the general price of this kit.

Numerous
aftermarket decal sheets exist for the Liberator, which allows a modeler
to have a good time building a good model of an important airplane. My
only regret is that no one has ever done "Witchcraft," the most
successful American bomber of World War II, which carried her five crews
through 137 missions between February 1944 and V-E Day, without a single
abort. I'll re-do this model in a hot New York Minute the day I get
those markings.

CONSTRUCTION

Yes, this kit
comes from the days when parts fit was not what one finds today upon
opening a Tamiya or Hasegawa kit, but with a bit of care and pre-fitting
of parts before adding glue, a modeler will find themselves only using
putty in a few places, with Mr. Surfacer 500 taking care of other seams
and joints in such a way that a minimum of the raised detail will be
lost.

There is not a
lot of interior provided, but what is there is more than sufficient if
you use the kit glass. I tried using the Koster vacuformed turrets, but
multiple-part turrets made from thin clear plastic do not make up that
easily into useable turrets; in the end, I managed to use the nose and
tail turrets from the kit, after Futuring the two halves and then joining
them with Micro Kyrstal Klear white glue, which became invisible and did
not crazy the plastic joint as would have been the case had I glued the
turret halves together with Ambroid Super Weld or any other plastic
cement.

I painted the
cockpit and nose area in Bronze Green, using Gunze-Sangyo Medium Green
F.S.34079, which is "close enough." The rear fuselage was painted with
Tamiya yellow zinc chromate. With a wash of Tamiya "Smoke" to pop out
detail, and painting the black boxes and instrument panels, etc., I
managed to do an interior that was good enough for my purposes. A
modeler could indeed do a lot more detailing of the interior,
particularly the bomb bay and the area around the waist guns, were they
so inclined.

I assembled
the fuselage, and left the bomb bay doors off, so that I could pour
sufficient fishweights down the lower nose beneath the cockpit floor once
the model was assembled and I could figure the weight. Approximately 55%
of the fuselage, with the tail, is aft of the main gear, which makes the
model a severe tail-sitter. Alternatively, you can leave the lower rear
hatch open and glue in a boarding ladder, which will prop up the tail.
Careful assembly along the centerline resulted in my only having to apply
a single coat of Mr. Surfacer 500 to get rid of that seam. By pressing
the rudders tight to the horizontal stabilizer when applying the Ambroid
Super Weld, and by repeating that process when gluing the tail assembly
to the fuselage, I managed to lose most of the gaps
and was able to take
care of the gap where the lower surface of the horizontal stabilizer
joins to the fuselage with some CA glue left in the gap to dry
"naturally."

The wings
assemble easily, but there is going to be some serious seams to be filled
along either side of both engine cowlings, and the gap when the front of
the cowling with the engine is glued in place. I hit the seams with CA
glue and accelerator, then sanded them smooth, applied Mr. Surfacer 500,
and got a good-looking result which only needed a bit of rescribing of
panel line detail.

Once the wings
were glued to the fuselage, I began pouring fish weights into the nose
until the model tilted nose-down while being held at the main gear plug.
This took about an entire bag of weights, some 22 little quarter-inch
balls, to accomplish.

CAMOUFLAGE & MARKINGS

Painting:

I first went
over all the seams with light grey to be sure I had gotten them
completely. Sure enough, I hadn't. A ran CA glue into the little gaps,
hit it with accelerator, and broke out the sanding sticks. Another coat
of grey revealed I had achieved the goal. I then pre-shaded the model
with flat black over the panel lines, and also painted the leading edges
of the flying surfaces for the de-icer boots. When that was dry I masked
off the de-icer boots.

The underside
was painted with Tamiya Neutral Grey, with the upper surfaces done with
Gunze Sangyo Olive Drab 1 and Olive Drab 2, which are different tones of
OD and give a good base to start fading. Since these airplanes operated
in northern Europe where they were mostly under cloud cover on the
ground, I added in some Gunze-Sangyo Violet for some of the panel fading,
in order to simulate UV effect, then added
in a bit of yellow to go over
the fabric control surfaces. The entire effect is quite muted and looks
accurate in person. When all was dry, the de-icer boots were unmasked
and the model was given two coats of Future.

Decals:

The model is
done as "Blasted Event," a B-24J of the 487th Bomb Group, which entered
combat from England in April 1944, as part of the Second Bomb Division,
which was equipped two-thirds with B-17 groups and one-third with B-24
groups. Due to the performance dissimilarities between the two types,
Eighth Air Force ordered the B-24 groups to re-equip with B-17s in June
and July 1944. The 487th said good-bye to their Liberators in July.

FINAL CONSTRUCTION

After the
decals were fully set and I had applied another coat of Future over
everything, I applied two coats of thinned Dullcote, then applied the
exhaust stains with Tamiya "Smoke," after which I applied another thin
coat of Dullcote to flatten down the too-glossy "Smoke."

I then
attached the landing gear and the nose, tail, and dorsal turrets, and the
propellers.

CONCLUSIONS

It is highly
unlikely anyone is going to release a "state of the art" B-24 or B-17,
since such kits would cost well over $100 nowadays. The Monogram B-24
can be found on dealer's tables at model shows for $20 or less, and is
excellent value for the money. The kit is not difficult to build, and
makes up into an impressive model. Those who say it isn't "state of the
art" and therefore somehow "unworthy" of being included in a collection
reveal their own ignorance. The Liberator was an important element in
the Allied arsenal that brought victory over fascism, and represents the
courage of thousands of young men who trusted themselves to it, just as
does the B-17 and the Lancaster. If you just gotta do it "better," Bill
Koster provides a kit of different turrets and noses that allow you to do
the B-24H, the B-24M with the manual tail turret, and the Navy PB4Y-1
with the Erco nose turret. What ever version you choose, the kit is an
enjoyable project that will benefit from an application of skill.

October 2003

Review kit courtesy
my wallet.

If you would like your product reviewed fairly and quickly by a
site that has over 200,000 visitors a month, please contact
me or see other details in the Note to
Contributors.